Album

Welcome To Saigon

Album

Welcome To Saigon

New York's Saigon spent three years waiting for his debut to drop despite everyone from Newsweek to XXL calling him hip-hop's most promising new star. On "Shok TV," Saigon takes a swing at the two pillars of American culture -- consumerism and Christianity -- and advises people to "stop putting so much trust in your religion." "Color Purple," meanwhile, calls for gang unity and declares "most all y'all n*gg*s are slaves to y'all's ego." These rhymes sound desperate and immediate.

About This Album

New York's Saigon spent three years waiting for his debut to drop despite everyone from Newsweek to XXL calling him hip-hop's most promising new star. On "Shok TV," Saigon takes a swing at the two pillars of American culture -- consumerism and Christianity -- and advises people to "stop putting so much trust in your religion." "Color Purple," meanwhile, calls for gang unity and declares "most all y'all n*gg*s are slaves to y'all's ego." These rhymes sound desperate and immediate.

About This Album

New York's Saigon spent three years waiting for his debut to drop despite everyone from Newsweek to XXL calling him hip-hop's most promising new star. On "Shok TV," Saigon takes a swing at the two pillars of American culture -- consumerism and Christianity -- and advises people to "stop putting so much trust in your religion." "Color Purple," meanwhile, calls for gang unity and declares "most all y'all n*gg*s are slaves to y'all's ego." These rhymes sound desperate and immediate.